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Metabolomics for Plant Health Biosecurity Diagnostics and Response

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posted on 2024-07-28, 21:05 authored by Alastair RossAlastair Ross, Hadley Muller, Arvind SubbarajArvind Subbaraj, Ines Homewood, Flore MasFlore Mas, Scott HardwickScott Hardwick, Lloyd Stringer, Jessica Vereijssen, Sandra Visnovsky, Adriana Najar-Rodriguez, Karen Armstrong

The increasing diversity of potential biosecurity threats makes their diagnosis a complicated and evolving area, requiring moving beyond traditional taxonomic species identification. New biosecurity diagnostic tools should provide a greater depth of information on threat biology to enable accurate risk assessment for the more efficient and effective deployment of biosecurity resources. Metabolomics is amongst the new approaches being explored for biosecurity diagnostics, where a broad spectrum of metabolites might signify relevant biological characteristics of an intercepted organism. Examples of these characteristics are physiological signatures of age, reproductive status, geographic origin, pathogen status of potential invertebrate vectors, and the distinction between diseases and abiotic plant stress symptoms. This broad-based approach is attractive, where several biological characteristics of an organism can be assessed with a single measurement. However, it can be impractical as several hundred biological replicates of the organism are needed to build a robust model of a species. New approaches such as mass spectral fingerprinting substantially reduce the time taken for metabolomics measurements, and more sophisticated modelling methods aid feasibility. Promising data are emerging for metabolomics and metabolite fingerprinting for potential biosecurity applications. We discuss the possibilities and potential uses for these new tools for post-detection decisions, diagnosis, and biosecurity.

Funding

Better Border Biosecurity (B3, b3nz.org.nz) research collaboration, project #D21.14

New Zealand Strategic Science Investment Fund

History

Rights statement

Copyright: © 2023 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

Publication date

2023-03-06

Project number

  • PRJ0765009

Language

  • English

Does this contain Māori information or data?

  • No

Publisher

MDPI

Journal title

Sustainability

ISSN

2071-1050

Volume/issue number

15

Page numbers

4654

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